1912 United States presidential election in Alabama

The 1912 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 5, 1912, as part of the 1912 United States presidential election. Alabama voters chose twelve representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1912 United States presidential election in Alabama

← 1908November 5, 19121916 →
 
NomineeWoodrow WilsonTheodore RooseveltWilliam Howard Taft
PartyDemocraticProgressiveRepublican
Home stateNew JerseyNew YorkOhio
Running mateThomas R. MarshallHiram JohnsonNicholas M. Butler
Electoral vote1200
Popular vote82,43822,6809,717
Percentage69.94%19.24%8.24%

County results

President before election

William Howard Taft
Republican

Elected President

Woodrow Wilson
Democratic

Over the preceding twenty years, Alabama had become effectively a one-party state ruled by the Democratic Party. Disenfranchisement of almost all African Americans and a large proportion of poor whites via poll taxes, literacy tests[1] and extralegal violence[2] had essentially eliminated opposition parties outside of Unionist Winston County and a few other northern hill counties that had been Populist strongholds.[3] The only competitive statewide elections became Democratic Party primaries limited by law to white voters.

Because the supporters of the Populist Party had previously been frequently lily-white Republicans,[4] and Alabama had the most substantial white Republican support in the Deep South, Alabama’s white Republicans would after the 1901 constitutional convention immediately make efforts to expel blacks from the state Republican Party.[5] For the 1904 Convention, President Theodore Roosevelt rejected this proposal, unlike in North Carolina where he acquiesced without opposition to the demands of Jeter Connelly Pritchard.[5] During the rest of the decade, as conservative Democratic rule was consolidated throughout the state, the party did shift toward a more progressive policy,[6] although African-American convict labour was increased in the coalfields near Birmingham during strikes late in the decade.[7]

In the election year of 1912, Oscar D. Street was appointed state Republican Party boss as part of the black-and-tan faction loyal to incumbent president William Howard Taft and Columbia University President Nicholas Murray Butler.[8] At the same time, Theodore Roosevelt and governor of California Hiram Johnson planned “lily-whitism” for the South with the “Bull Moose” party after Roosevelt broke from the GOP.[9]

No polls were taken in the state during the election season, and despite Roosevelt’s popularity even in the Solid South,[10] Democratic nominees Princeton University President Woodrow Wilson and governor of Indiana Thomas R. Marshall won Alabama easily with 69.94% of the popular vote, against the 26th president of the United States, with 19.24 percent to Roosevelt and 8.24 percent to Taft.[11]

Results edit

1912 United States presidential election in Alabama[11]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticWoodrow Wilson 82,438 69.94%
ProgressiveTheodore Roosevelt22,68019.24%
RepublicanWilliam Howard Taft9,7178.24%
SocialistEugene V. Debs3,0292.57%
IndependentWrite-in50.00%
Total votes117,869 100%

Results by county edit

1912 United States presidential election in Alabama by county
CountyThomas Woodrow Wilson[12]
Democratic
William Howard Taft[12]
Republican
Theodore Roosevelt[13]
Progressive
Eugene Victor Debs[14]
Socialist
Margin[a]Total votes cast
#%#%#%#%#%
Autauga62273.35%435.07%12714.98%566.60%49558.37%848
Baldwin62367.28%374.00%14115.23%12513.50%48252.05%926
Barbour1,15590.38%181.41%886.89%171.33%1,06783.49%1,278
Bibb82071.87%403.51%17815.60%1039.03%64256.27%1,141
Blount1,12148.74%56724.65%58025.22%321.39%54123.52%2,300
Bullock73699.19%40.54%20.27%00.00%732[b]98.65%742
Butler90383.00%867.90%807.35%191.75%817[b]75.09%1,088
Calhoun1,66670.62%23810.09%42317.93%321.36%1,24352.69%2,359
Chambers1,48690.83%281.71%1136.91%90.55%1,37383.92%1,636
Cherokee81446.57%885.03%79945.71%472.69%150.86%1,748
Chilton88039.18%1406.23%1,15451.38%723.21%-274-12.20%2,246
Choctaw48986.40%71.24%6611.66%40.71%42374.73%566
Clarke1,02495.34%131.21%121.12%252.33%999[c]93.02%1,074
Clay1,10952.46%643.03%93944.42%20.09%1708.04%2,114
Cleburne69151.72%1339.96%51038.17%20.15%18113.55%1,336
Coffee1,27770.67%683.76%39521.86%673.71%88248.81%1,807
Colbert94663.28%22815.25%24216.19%795.28%70447.09%1,495
Conecuh80280.93%606.05%10310.39%262.62%69970.53%991
Coosa76363.27%1099.04%31726.29%171.41%44636.98%1,206
Covington1,25173.54%1106.47%1478.64%19311.35%1,058[c]62.20%1,701
Crenshaw98684.49%474.03%12710.88%70.60%85973.61%1,167
Cullman1,23042.49%2649.12%1,37447.46%270.93%-144-4.97%2,895
Dale1,05966.02%996.17%44327.62%30.19%61638.40%1,604
Dallas1,46196.69%161.06%181.19%161.06%1,44395.50%1,511
DeKalb1,37954.61%49219.49%62324.67%311.23%75629.94%2,525
Elmore1,15281.70%815.74%16711.84%100.71%98569.86%1,410
Escambia82985.64%525.37%747.64%131.34%75578.00%968
Etowah1,51152.18%35412.22%88730.63%1444.97%62421.55%2,896
Fayette76250.07%43428.52%30620.11%201.31%328[b]21.55%1,522
Franklin84947.09%30917.14%57031.61%754.16%27915.47%1,803
Geneva89157.93%996.44%51133.22%372.41%38024.71%1,538
Greene41881.01%40.78%9418.22%00.00%32462.79%516
Hale72098.50%40.55%70.96%00.00%71397.54%731
Henry71175.88%475.02%15316.33%262.77%55859.55%937
Houston1,16070.18%824.96%36622.14%452.72%79448.03%1,653
Jackson1,59770.82%22910.16%40618.00%231.02%1,19152.82%2,255
Jefferson8,88772.69%6935.67%2,03416.64%6125.01%6,85356.05%12,226
Lamar81677.94%615.83%16015.28%100.96%65662.66%1,047
Lauderdale1,38668.68%26313.03%29714.72%723.57%1,08953.96%2,018
Lawrence64356.70%19817.46%26123.02%322.82%38233.69%1,134
Lee1,17988.98%433.25%433.25%604.53%1,119[c]84.45%1,325
Limestone1,01283.02%907.38%836.81%342.79%922[b]75.64%1,219
Lowndes58397.00%40.67%101.66%40.67%57395.34%601
Macon64793.23%243.46%233.31%00.00%623[b]89.77%694
Madison2,14678.21%1505.47%35713.01%913.32%1,78965.20%2,744
Marengo1,38697.88%90.64%201.41%10.07%1,36696.47%1,416
Marion1,09865.05%37822.39%20512.14%70.41%720[b]42.65%1,688
Marshall1,45747.11%42813.84%1,18438.28%240.78%2738.83%3,093
Mobile3,00979.98%1403.72%44511.83%1684.47%2,56468.16%3,762
Monroe87897.12%20.22%212.32%30.33%85794.80%904
Montgomery3,04794.10%431.33%1314.05%170.53%2,91690.06%3,238
Morgan1,68671.11%24110.16%36215.27%823.46%1,32455.84%2,371
Perry73193.84%30.39%313.98%141.80%70089.86%779
Pickens81588.01%222.38%737.88%161.73%74280.13%926
Pike1,29395.14%130.96%483.53%50.37%1,24591.61%1,359
Randolph1,17764.99%26814.80%36620.21%00.00%81144.78%1,811
Russell1,55396.22%40.25%352.17%221.36%1,51894.05%1,614
Shelby1,18144.45%2017.56%1,23346.41%421.58%-52-1.96%2,657
St. Clair78743.50%26014.37%68737.98%754.15%1005.53%1,809
Sumter70197.09%91.25%20.28%101.39%691[c]95.71%722
Talladega1,31272.49%1116.13%38621.33%10.06%92651.16%1,810
Tallapoosa1,58686.06%844.56%1518.19%221.19%1,43577.86%1,843
Tuscaloosa1,69585.22%874.37%1587.94%492.46%1,53777.28%1,989
Walker2,06357.71%88124.64%50414.10%1273.55%1,182[b]33.06%3,575
Washington40590.20%143.12%184.01%122.67%38786.19%449
Wilcox87897.77%70.78%70.78%60.67%87196.99%898
Winston50829.88%29217.18%89352.53%70.41%-385-22.65%1,700
Totals82,43869.89%9,7178.24%22,770[d]19.30%3,0292.57%59,66850.59%117,954

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Because Roosevelt finished ahead of Taft in Alabama as a whole, all margins given are Wilson minus Roosevelt unless stated in the total for the county in question.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g In this county where Taft did run second ahead of Roosevelt, the margin given is that between Wilson and Taft.
  3. ^ a b c d In this county where Debs ran second ahead of both Roosevelt and Taft, the margin given is that between Wilson and Debs.
  4. ^ For the Roosevelt ticket only, there are differences between the Géoelections/Edgar Eugene Robinson figure and that from Dave Leip’s Atlas, with the former used only for the county table.

References edit

  1. ^ Perman, Michael (2001). Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888–1908. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. Introduction. ISBN 9780807849095.
  2. ^ Feldman, Glenn. The Disfranchisement Myth: Poor Whites and Suffrage Restriction in Alabama. p. 157. ISBN 0820326151.
  3. ^ Webb, Samuel L. "From Independents to Populists to Progressive Republicans: The Case of Chilton County, Alabama, 1880-1920". The Journal of Southern History. 59 (4): 707–736.
  4. ^ Feldman, The Disfranchisement Myth, p. 151
  5. ^ a b Heersink, Boris; Jenkins, Jeffery A. (2020). Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865-1968. pp. 251–253. ISBN 9781107158436.
  6. ^ "Harris, "Braxton Bragg Comer (1901-11)"". Encyclopedia of Alabama.
  7. ^ Kelly, Brian (2001). Race, Class and Power in the Alabama Coalfields 1908-1921. Urbana: University of Illinois Free Press. ISBN 0252069331.
  8. ^ Casdorph, Paul D. (1981). Republicans, Negroes, and Progressives in the South, 1912-1916. The University of Alabama Press. pp. 70, 94–95. ISBN 0817300481.
  9. ^ Link, Arthur S. (January 1947). "The Negro as a Factor in the Campaign of 1912". The Journal of Negro History. 32 (1). The University of Chicago Press: 81–99.
  10. ^ Link, Arthur S. (July 1946). "Theodore Roosevelt and the South in 1912". The North Carolina Historical Review. 23 (3). North Carolina Office of Archives and History: 313–324.
  11. ^ a b "1912 Presidential Election Results – Alabama". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  12. ^ a b Robinson, Edgar Eugene; The Presidential Vote; 1896-1932 (second edition), pp. 226–227. Published 1947 by Stanford University Press.
  13. ^ "1912 Presidential Election Popular Vote for Theodore Roosevelt". Géoelections. (.xlsx file for €15)
  14. ^ "1912 Presidential Election Popular Vote for Eugene Debs". Géoelections. (.xlsx file for €15)